Article 75TQS UK MPs slam digital ID rollout as a 'fiasco' after botched launch

UK MPs slam digital ID rollout as a 'fiasco' after botched launch

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from www.theregister.com - Articles on (#75TQS)
Story ImageBritain's digital ID push has been mauled by MPs after the government unveiled plans that appeared to arrive several steps ahead of actual policy. A report from Parliament's Home Affairs Committee this week concluded the government's handling of mandatory digital ID plans was "rushed, poorly thought out and failed to make a convincing case." It warned that ministers had already undermined public confidence with what MPs described as a rushed and inadequate announcement. According to the committee, there was "no rigorous policy development and no public consultation ahead of the announcement," which left ministers struggling to answer basic questions about privacy, implementation, safeguards, and how the system would actually operate in practice. The report said the proposal "came out of the blue, causing alarm and uncertainty" and warned that the government's "incoherent approach to policy development cannot be repeated if public trust is to be rebuilt." The committee stopped short of opposing digital identity outright. Instead, MPs argued that digital ID could still improve access to public services, but only if ministers stop treating national identity infrastructure like a last-minute product launch and start acting as though the public might reasonably want to know what they are signing up for. Opposition to the wider scheme has been building for months. Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham previously warned that tying digital ID to employment checks risked creating a "backdoor national ID system," while privacy campaigners and civil liberties groups have repeatedly raised concerns about surveillance, data sharing, and function creep since the plans were first unveiled last year. The government's approach to consultation has also come under fire. Last month, it barred journalists from joining a digital identity advisory panel event, which did little to quell accusations that ministers were trying to build critical pieces of national identity infrastructure behind closed doors. Chair of the committee Dame Karen Bradley described the government's early efforts as "nothing short of a fiasco," adding: "To the public this announcement came out of the blue and made little sense." The report also highlighted growing concern around digital right-to-work checks, which ministers still intend to make mandatory even after backing away from compulsory government-issued ID cards earlier this year. MPs warned this could effectively mean UK citizens would need either a passport or a digital ID simply in order to work legally. "It is vital that this change is not just treated as an afterthought to digital ID," the committee wrote, warning that the implications for people without passports had barely been addressed in consultation documents. The committee also warned that rebuilding confidence may prove difficult given what it diplomatically called the government's "poor track record of digital transformation." In other words, MPs aren't entirely convinced the same government that brought Britain some of its more memorable public sector IT disasters should be trusted to build national identity infrastructure. (R)
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